THE AGENTS ARE WORKING OVERTIME...
TO CAUSE BLACK AMERICANS TO HATE THEIR OWN AFRICAN PEOPLE
For generations, Black people in America have been taught to look at Africa through a broken and distorted lens. From schoolbooks to TV commercials showing starving children, Africa has been painted as a place of poverty and struggle, not greatness and wealth. Many of us grew up believing that Africa had nothing to offer, that only slaves came from there, and that our story began on American soil. But in reality, the opposite is true — Africa is the birthplace of civilization, the source of massive natural wealth, and the home of our deepest roots.
Now, in the digital age, there’s a new form of propaganda happening — not on paper, not on the evening news, but through social media algorithms. Whenever you scroll through platforms like YouTube, X (formerly Twitter), Instagram, or TikTok, there’s an invisible force deciding what you see. And too often, it seems those systems push videos, memes, and posts that fuel division between Black Americans and Africans. The question is, why? Why would anyone want to keep us divided when unity could empower us all?
Here are ten major reasons why anti-African propaganda is being promoted so hard online — and why the powers that be fear our global unity.
1. Memorandum 46 and Fear of Global Black Unity
In 1978, a secret U.S. government document called National Security Council Memorandum 46 was written, discussing how the government should manage relationships between African nations and Black Americans. It warned about the “potential danger” of unity between Africans and African Americans. The memo suggested ways to prevent cooperation, fearing that a strong global Black alliance would challenge Western control over African resources and global influence. That fear is still alive today — only now, it’s spread through algorithms instead of policy papers.
2. Dividing to Conquer Has Always Worked
From slavery to colonialism, those in power have always known that dividing people of the same heritage keeps them weak. During slavery, lighter and darker skin tones were used to create jealousy and separation. During colonialism, Africans were divided by tribes and language. Today, social media continues that same strategy — dividing Black people by nationality, culture, and history.
3. Controlling the Narrative Through Education
For decades, American schools taught that Africa was nothing more than a jungle filled with poverty and war. Children grew up seeing Africa as something to escape, not something to be proud of. That conditioning didn’t stop in the classroom; it carried into adulthood and now lives online, shaping how Black Americans think about their roots.
4. Media Imagery That Destroys Pride
Those heartbreaking charity commercials showing starving African children are not meant to help — they are meant to program pity instead of pride. When that’s all we see, we subconsciously disconnect from Africa. Meanwhile, no one shows the thriving cities, the modern industries, or the brilliant minds on the continent. That’s not by accident. It’s by design.
5. Social Media Algorithms Reward Conflict
Social media companies are not built for truth — they’re built for engagement. The more emotional a post makes people, the more clicks it gets. So when users argue over who’s “really Black” or whether “Africans sold us into slavery,” those heated debates go viral. The platforms make money while our unity burns.
6. The Fear of Economic Independence
Africa has what the world wants — gold, oil, diamonds, cocoa, lithium, and much more. Black Americans have what Africa needs — experience in global markets, technology, and media power. If those two forces united, we could build a self-sustaining global economy independent of Western corporations. That’s exactly what the world’s elite fear most.
7. Keeping the Slave Mindset Alive
A slave doesn’t have to be in chains to be controlled. As long as the mind is captured, freedom is an illusion. Propaganda keeps Black Americans disconnected from their African brothers and sisters, reinforcing the false idea that “we’re different.” This keeps us emotionally and mentally enslaved — separated by invisible borders drawn by those who profit from our division.
8. The Threat of Political Power
Imagine if Africans across the world — from America to Ghana to South Africa — voted, invested, and organized as one global block. We would control economies, influence policies, and demand justice worldwide. That’s why division is constantly pushed — unity would change everything.
9. Psychological Programming Through Media
Every generation has been fed images of Africans as “less than,” while glorifying European standards of beauty, success, and civilization. When people grow up with that media conditioning, they begin to believe it’s true. Algorithms now amplify that same mental programming on a global scale, recycling old lies through new technology.
10. The Awakening Has Already Begun
Despite the propaganda, many Black Americans are traveling to Africa, investing, and reconnecting with the continent. Social media can’t stop that truth forever. Every time someone sees Africa’s beauty firsthand or learns the real history that was hidden, the system loses power. That’s why the propaganda has gotten louder — because the awakening is spreading faster.
Our Unity Is Their Fear
The constant flood of anti-African content on social media is not random — it’s strategic. Those who control the flow of information understand that if Black people across the world unite, their systems of exploitation will crumble. That’s why they pump out division, self-hate, and confusion. But it’s time to look past the manipulation and see the truth for what it is.
Africa is not a poor continent — it’s a rich land that has been robbed. Black Americans are not disconnected from Africa — we are her children. When we reconnect, rebuild, and re-educate ourselves, no algorithm or propaganda can stop what’s coming. Our unity is the most powerful threat to oppression — and the greatest promise for our freedom.




